We’ve been rumbled. From how we use emojis to what our Facebook posts really mean, there are some things we do everyday that we’re all guilty of.

THERE’S nothing more alarming than a mobile battery on one per cent, we can’t survive without internet for more than a couple of hours and we always end up trying to get rid of mum on the phone.

These are all shameful truths and something we’re all guilty of. Here are some more reeling revelations of our tech habits:

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Listening to online music spawns a Jekyll and Hyde personality in all of us. On Spotify we’re compelled to listen to those artists no hipster would dare admit to not knowing, while on iTunes our guilty pleasures always get the best of us.

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Look familiar? They say a picture can paint a thousand words and in this case an emoticon can display how our mood changes from a depressing a Monday to hungover Sunday.

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Hands up if you’re guilty of this. We’d imagine a lot of arms are sheepishly raised in the air right now. While a convo with dear old mum is lovely the hard truth is we spend most of the time trying to find a tactful way to end it. “I’m just rushing out”, “I’m about to go into a lift” and “my battery is about to die” are lines ringing around our shamefully lowered heads.

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Every Facebook philosopher out there knows those cheesy, profound lines they post have hidden meanings. We might think they’re cryptic but their true meanings are about as subtle as a child’s tantrum in a supermarket.

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Aren’t quirky email signatures a great way to crowbar in a slice of your personality? No, but we know people who do it. Those post script antics can reveal a lot about us, from our eco credentials to lack of tech skills or desperate plug to gain a following on social media.

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Biohazard, danger of electrocution or nuclear waste — none of these can elicit the same fear and blind panic from us as a mobile phone on one per cent battery.

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We lie and get lied to on the internet on a daily basis. From pretending to read that iTunes agreement to being told we’ll get the body of our dreams if we click on this link ‘RIGHT NOW’. But perhaps the biggest porky we use is the ‘LOL’. Did that Tweet really make you blurt out a belly laugh? Most of the time, no. We’re guilty of saying we’re laughing out loud when we’re not and certainly can’t remember the last time we rolled on the floor laughing.

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We all know this pain. Food and water might be fundamental for life but here’s a first world problem that leaves us feeling like the end of existence: no internet. The shocking truth is we could survive without water for days but could you imagine trying to get through the day without Google? We might actually have to ask a human for our answers.

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There’s no truer test to see who your real friends are than a Facebook invite. From the moment it’s sent we find ourselves keeping an eagle eye on our ‘friends’. How they respond and even how quickly they do it is being subconsciously scrutinised. And then there’s what our responses really mean. We might say we’re going, but really if anything better pops up we’re going to that. Those ‘not going’ responses are simply a way to say we’re just not that good mates.

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We were liking and poking on Facebook for ages but it wasn’t until the dislike button turned up we finally got what we wanted. Finally we didn’t have to sarcastically and passive aggressively ‘like’ pictures of people’s abs. Now it’s the icon we find ourselves using more than anything else.